Kenya: UN reports improved security, steps up aid to displaced
7 February 2008 - The United Nations said today that security has improved slightly in Kenya, where the unrest sparked by December's
disputed elections has uprooted over 300,000 people from their homes and agencies are increasing efforts to aid those
affected.
At the same time, the UN Country Team reported sporadic violence in Kericho, Eldoret, Kisumu and the capital, Nairobi,
and called the humanitarian situation "precarious."
According to the Kenya Red Cross Society, there are now some 325,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the country.
The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that UN teams will step up the delivery of aid to
more than 39,000 IDPs spread out in 15 camps in the North Rift Valley. Medicine, food and water are the most pressing
needs for the IDPs.
On Tuesday, the World Food Programme (WFP) handed out some 80 tons of food at 11 IDP camps. Around 2,000 displaced
children under the age of 5 also received supplementary food items to prevent malnutrition. The agency also noted that
enrolment in UN-assisted schools in Nairobi slums is some 28 per cent lower than before the outbreak of violence.
Meanwhile, the Government of Uganda now estimates there are 12,000 Kenyan refugees on its soil, based on a joint tally
with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
On the political front, the mediation team led by former Secretary-General Kofi Annan has recently reported progress in
negotiations between the Government and the opposition.
While welcoming that development, the Security Council yesterday expressed its strong concern at the continuing dire
humanitarian situation in the country. In a presidential statement, the 15-member body also requested Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon to report on how the UN can further support the mediation efforts in Kenya, as well as on the impact of the
crisis on the wider sub-region and UN operations in that area.
Mr. Ban has dispatched UN Emergency Relief Coordinator John Holmes to Kenya, and he is scheduled to arrive in Nairobi
tomorrow for a three-day mission to assess the humanitarian situation in the country.
ENDS